New British Sculpture is the name given to the work of a group of artists, sculptors and installation artists who began to exhibit together in London, England, in the early 1980s, including Tony Cragg, Richard Deacon and Richard Wentworth.
Tim Woods has characterized the movement by identifying four major themes, "(a) a synthesis of pop and kitsch, (b) a bricolage (assemblage) of the decaying UK urban environment and the waste of consumer society, (c) an exploration of the way in which objects are assigned meanings, and (d) a play of colour, wit and humour." An early champion was art dealer Nicholas Logsdail who exhibited many of the artists at his Lisson Gallery.
Jonathan David Anthony Bowden (April 12, 1962 - March 29, 2012) was a British political figure who had been involved with a number of political parties and groups, and a leading speaker on the nationalist circuit. His great influence was the novelist, Bill Hopkins, who had been one of the Angry Young Men of the 1950s.
Bowden was born in Kent and was educated at Presentation College, Reading, Berkshire. In 1983-4 he completed one year of a B.A. history course at London University's Birkbeck College, but then left. He began his political career as a member of the Conservative Party in the Tower Hamlets association, in the Shoreditch and Stepney Green constituency. In October 1990 (until 1992) he joined the Monday Club, where the following year he made an unsuccessful bid to stand for its Executive Council. In May 1991, he was appointed co-chairman, with Stuart Millson, of the Club's Media Committee. During the early 1990s, he stated that he had been the deputy chairman of the Western Goals Institute although this cannot be verified.
Phyllida Barlow (born 1944, Newcastle upon Tyne, England) is a British artist living and working in London. Barlow studied at Chelsea College of Art (1960-1963) before moving to the Slade School of Fine Art, (1963-1966) where she later became a Professor. Former pupils of Barlow include artists Tacita Dean, Rachel Whiteread and Douglas Gordon. In 2009, she stopped teaching in order to focus on her own work. In 2011, Barlow was elected a Royal Academician .
"Things aren't just visual. They are sensations of physicality". – Phyllida Barlow in Modern Painters, Summer 2011
For over four decades, Barlow has created anti-monumental sculptures from inexpensive, low-grade materials such as cardboard, fabric, plywood, polystyrene, scrim and cement. Barlow's sculptural practice is centred on her experimentation with these materials and the process of re-contextualising them to create large-scale, three-dimensional collages. Her constructions are often crudely painted in industrial or synthetic colours, resulting in abstract, seemingly unstable forms: the seams of their construction are simultaneously revealed and concealed. Often appearing unstable and ephemeral, Barlow’s work constantly reinvestigates the possibilities of form, mass and volume. Drawing also plays an important role in Barlow’s practice. Her works on paper echo the rough surfaces of her sculpture and play with matter and space. The drawings are made independently of the sculptural works and are not preparatory sketches but works in their own right.
Antony Mark David Gormley OBE RA (born 30 August 1950) is a British sculptor. His best known works include the Angel of the North, a public sculpture in the North of England, commissioned in 1994 and erected in February 1998, Another Place on Crosby Beach near Liverpool, and Event Horizon, a multi-part site installation which premiered in London in 2007, and in 2010 around Madison Square in New York City.
The youngest of seven children born to a German mother and an Irish father, Gormley grew up in a wealthy Roman Catholic family living in Dewsbury Moor, West Yorkshire. He attended Ampleforth College, a Benedictine boarding school in Yorkshire, before reading archaeology, anthropology and the history of art at Trinity College, Cambridge, from 1968 to 1971. He travelled to India and Sri Lanka to learn more about Buddhism between 1971 and 1974. Attending at Central Saint Martins College of Art and Design and Goldsmiths in London from 1974, he completed his studies with a postgraduate course in sculpture at the Slade School of Fine Art, University College, London, between 1977 and 1979.
Joanna Lamond Lumley, OBE, FRGS (born 1 May 1946) is a British actress, voice-over artist, former-model and author, best known for her roles in British television series Absolutely Fabulous portraying Edina Monsoon's best friend, Patsy Stone, as well as parts in The New Avengers, Sapphire & Steel, and Sensitive Skin. Her distinctive voice has been supplied for animated characters, film narration, and AOL's "You have email" notification in the UK. She has spoken out as a human rights activist for Survival International and the Gurkha Justice Campaign, and is now considered a "national treasure" of Nepal because of her support. She is an advocate for a number of charities and animal welfare groups such as CIWF and Viva! She has won three BAFTA awards and a British Comedy Award.
Joanna Lamond Lumley was born on 1 May 1946 in Srinagar, in the princely state of Kashmir and Jammu, which was then part of British India. Her parents were Major James Rutherford Lumley, who served in the 6th Gurkha Rifles, a regiment of the British Indian Army, and Beatrice Rose Weir. They married in 1941. After the independence of India in 1947, the Lumleys relocated back to their home country of England[citation needed]; county Kent. The family also spent time in Malaya (now Malaysia). Lumley was educated at St Mary's Convent School in St Leonards-on-Sea, East Sussex, England, and afterwards attended the Lucie Clayton finishing school, after being turned down by the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art at the age of 16.
Bedlam Sculptures - Romancing the Stone: The Golden Ages of British Sculpture - BBC Four
Jonathan Bowden On British Sculpture (Complete)
Jonathan Bowden on British Sculpture (Part1)
Post-war British sculpture and paintings at The Hepworth Wakefield
Modern British Sculpture Video: An Incoherent Jumbling of Otherwise Impressive Art
Modern & Post-War British Sculpture
Troika - Cloud, Kinetic Sculpture 2008
Jonathan Bowden on British Sculpture (Part 3)
Jonathan Bowden on British Sculpture (Part 5)
Jonathan Bowden on British Sculpture (Part 6)
Jonathan Bowden on British Sculpture (final part)
Jonathan Bowden on British Sculpture (part7)
Jonathan Bowden on British Sculpture (part four)
Troika - 'Cloud' - digital sculpture for British Airways
Bedlam Sculptures - Romancing the Stone: The Golden Ages of British Sculpture - BBC Four
Jonathan Bowden On British Sculpture (Complete)
Jonathan Bowden on British Sculpture (Part1)
Post-war British sculpture and paintings at The Hepworth Wakefield
Modern British Sculpture Video: An Incoherent Jumbling of Otherwise Impressive Art
Modern & Post-War British Sculpture
Troika - Cloud, Kinetic Sculpture 2008
Jonathan Bowden on British Sculpture (Part 3)
Jonathan Bowden on British Sculpture (Part 5)
Jonathan Bowden on British Sculpture (Part 6)
Jonathan Bowden on British Sculpture (final part)
Jonathan Bowden on British Sculpture (part7)
Jonathan Bowden on British Sculpture (part four)
Troika - 'Cloud' - digital sculpture for British Airways
Phyllida Barlow at the New Museum, New York
Antony Gormley Yorkshire Sculpture Park - Field for the British Isles Review
The British Museum Greek Hoplite Armor / Armour ( Red, Black figure Vases Sculpture)
British Actress Joanna Lumley unveils Elmgreen & Dragset's Fourth Plinth Statue
Sculpture Exhibition At Tate Gallery (1965)
Egyptian sculptures at the British Museum, London
Shirazeh Houshiary Artist Sculpture Monument Bosa Bayside Downtown San Diego Condos
Desert Rat Takes New Form in Sculpture 03.12.13
DANBURY MINT BRITISH PARATROOPERS,ARNHEM,SEPTEMBER 1944, PEWTER SCULPTURE